, commanding
V Corps, Brigadier General
Frank Parker, commanding the 1st Division, Brigadier General Francis C. Marshall, commanding the 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, France, October 31, 1918. In 1901, Francis Marshall served as a captain with the 15th Cavalry. On February 9, 1920, Kentucky Governor
Edwin P. Morrow called the Federal government to send Federal troops to
Lexington, Kentucky, because of the ongoing tense situations in the city. The
Kentucky Army National Guard and Lexington Police Department had already killed six people, while holding back a crowd from advancing on a courthouse to lynch
Will Lockett, an African-American serial killer who was on trial for murdering 10-year-old white girl Geneva Hardman. Later that afternoon, Marshall arrived to Lexington on special trains with 1,200 Army soldiers under his command. He imposed
martial law in the city. The day after the shootings, Marshall declared, "This community has set a fine example against lawlessness and Bolshevism and has killed several of its own citizens in upholding law and order." To prevent more lynchers from organizing, Marshall enacted citywide censorship. He ordered local telephone and telegraph companies to shut down all communication within 100 miles from Lexington. He banned any messages from leaving the city. Marshall also organized 12 patrols to guard certain areas of the county. Those areas included the local armory, the home of the judge, the home of the head of the county, and the black districts of Lexington. Marshall also attempted to have certain members of the crowd indicted for inciting the riot. A report asserted that most of them were curious bystanders, but "there were undoubtedly among the crowd various men, mostly from other counties than Fayette, intent on lynching Lockett." Marshall handpicked jurors whom he knew would have no trouble convicting the rioters. However, the grand jury was discarded on the grounds that the indictments would be thrown out on constitutional grounds. A second grand jury was convened. It had secured testimony against certain individuals guilty of inciting the crowd. However, on February 26, 1920, they concluded that handing down indictments with subsequent trials would "only tend to aggravate an already tense situation, engender more passion and bitter feelings in the County and State, and keep alive such as now exists." ==Awards ==